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Reg Edwards wrote:
Errr, no, the meter is telling what it sees at the point of measurement. ===================================== But the meter is not seeing an SWR because an SWR does not exist. Nonsense. Where is the 50-ohm transmission line on which the SWR is imagined or supposed to lie? In my personal case, there is 50 Ohm transmission line between the transceiver and the SWR meter, then a length of line to a coax switch, then several lines out to antennas. You seem fixated on haveing some magical length of transmission line being necessary for a SWR to exist. This is nonsense. As you are unable to answer that question, the remainder of your argument (which, as I say, arises because of the SWR meter misleading misnomer) falls flat on its face. You are an intelligent person. I don't doubt you have no problems with understanding what the so-called SWR meter really indicates. But you didn't learn this from observations of the SWR meter - as you already know it tells lies! Babble. A SWR meter indicates what is. Knowing what the reading really means is a matter of education, not veracity. Just to reiterate, the so-called SWR meter indicates only whether or not the load on the transmitter is a resistive 50 ohms. If it is not 50 ohms it will not tell you what it actually is. Not that you need to know what it actually is because you will readjust your tuner, without thinking about it, to make it equal to 50 ohms. Which corresponds to no deflection of the meter needle. With some education and multiple measurements, you can caluclate the actual impedance if one desires. What tuner? What makes you believe everyone has a tuner? The TLI is a very useful and valuable device. It does not lead novices and old-wives (who ought to know better) into false ideas, or cause confusion and misunderstandings within the amateur fraternity. Professionals dismiss SWR for what it is worth anyway. The only one I see confused is you and professionals use SWR all the time and in many systems it is extremely important. Goodby to SWR except on lines where it matters and where it can be measured. Which, in practice, are very few. If one knows what they are doing, SWR can always be measured. --- Reg, G4FGQ. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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